Who won Sunday night’s Democratic debate?

According to Google, the winner is...

Fresh off a week of favorable polls that had the independent Vermont senator closing in—or surpassing—leading challenger Hillary Clinton in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, Sanders dominated Sunday night’s Democratic presidential debate by all available real-time metrics.

Sanders remained the most-searched candidate on the stage—which featured former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley alongside Sanders and Clinton—throughout virtually the entire debate, according to Google‘s data.

On Twitter, Sanders gained a higher percentage of followers than any of the other two Democratic presidential candidates, according to Twitter’s data. He also earned more mentions throughout the night.

Beyond the Democrats, Sanders gained a greater percentage of followers than any presidential candidate of either party, while Republican frontrunner Donald Trump took second place, ahead of either Clinton or O’Malley.

Although both Sanders and O’Malley may have gained a greater percentage of followers than Clinton, the former secretary of state still crushes either of her rivals in raw follower numbers. Clinton has 5.15 million followers, while Sanders has 1.17 million, and O’Malley enjoys approximately 125,000. (Trump, in case you’re wondering, has them all beat, with 5.73 million followers.)

Sanders commanded the conversation on anonymous social media app Yik Yak as well, where he took 42.7 percent of all mentions, followed by Clinton’s 35.1 percent and O’Malley’s 22.2 percent, according to data shared with the Daily Dot.

Sanders’ disapproval rating on the platform was 27.7 percent to Clinton’s 52.5 percent.

Yik Yak

Sunday night’s debate comes just 15 days before the first real votes of the 2016 election, when Iowans caucus on Feb. 1 to choose their picks for both the Republican and Democratic nominees. The next Democratic debate will not be held until Feb. 11, after both the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary, which will take place on Feb. 9.

Will this debate performance be enough to thrust Sanders firmly into the frontrunner position? Watch the full debate below, and decide for yourself.

Andrew Couts is the former editor of Layer 8, a section dedicated to the intersection of the Internet and the state—and the gaps in between. Prior to the Daily Dot, Couts served as features editor and features writer for Digital Trends, associate editor of TheWeek.com, and associate editor at Maxim magazine. When he’s not working, Couts can be found hiking with his German shepherds or blasting around on motorcycles.